Ray Kurzweil - How to Create a Mind - The Secret of Human Thought Revealed

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Ray Kurzweil, the bold futurist and author of The New York Times bestseller The Singularity Is Near, is arguably today’s most influential technological visionary. A pioneering inventor and theorist, he has explored for decades how artificial intelligence can enrich and expand human capabilities.
Now, in his much-anticipated How to Create a Mind, he takes this exploration to the next step: reverse-engineering the brain to understand precisely how it works, then applying that knowledge to create vastly intelligent machines.
Drawing on the most recent neuroscience research, his own research and inventions in artificial intelligence, and compelling thought experiments, he describes his new theory of how the neocortex (the thinking part of the brain) works: as a self-organizing hierarchical system of pattern recognizers. Kurzweil shows how these insights will enable us to greatly extend the powers of our own mind and provides a roadmap for the creation of superintelligence—humankind's most exciting next venture. We are now at the dawn of an era of radical possibilities in which merging with our technology will enable us to effectively address the world’s grand challenges.
How to Create a Mind is certain to be one of the most widely discussed and debated science books in many years—a touchstone for any consideration of the path of human progress.

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The Moving Frontier of AI: Climbing the Competence Hierarchy

A long tiresome speech delivered by a frothy pie topping.

A garment worn by a child, perhaps aboard an operatic ship.

Wanted for a twelve-year crime spree of eating King Hrothgar’s warriors; officer Beowulf has been assigned the case.

It can mean to develop gradually in the mind or to carry during pregnancy.

National Teacher Day and Kentucky Derby Day.

Wordsworth said they soar but never roam.

Four-letter word for the iron fitting on the hoof of a horse or a card-dealing box in a casino.

In act three of an 1846 Verdi opera, this Scourge of God is stabbed to death by his lover, Odabella.

—Examples of Jeopardy! queries, all of which Watson got correct. Answers are: meringue harangue, pinafore, Grendel, gestate, May, skylark, shoe. For the eighth query, Watson replied, “What is Attila?” The host responded by saying, “Be more specific?” Watson clarified with, “What is Attila the Hun?,” which is correct.

The computer’s techniques for unraveling Jeopardy! clues sounded just like mine. That machine zeroes in on key words in a clue, then combs its memory (in Watson’s case, a 15-terabyte data bank of human knowledge) for clusters of associations with these words. It rigorously checks the top hits against all the contextual information it can muster: the category name; the kind of answer being sought; the time, place, and gender hinted at in the clue; and so on. And when it feels “sure” enough, it decides to buzz. This is all an instant, intuitive process for a human Jeopardy! player, but I felt convinced that under the hood my brain was doing more or less the same thing.

—Ken Jennings, human Jeopardy! champion who lost to Watson

I, for one, welcome our new robot overlords.

Ken Jennings, paraphrasing The Simpsons, after losing to Watson

Oh my god. [Watson] is more intelligent than the average Jeopardy! player in answering Jeopardy! questions. That’s impressively intelligent.

Sebastian Thrun, former director of the Stanford AI Lab

Watson understands nothing. It’s a bigger steamroller.

Noam Chomsky

Artificial intelligence is all around us—we no longer have our hand on the plug. The simple act of connecting with someone via a text message, e-mail, or cell phone call uses intelligent algorithms to route the information. Almost every product we touch is originally designed in a collaboration between human and artificial intelligence and then built in automated factories. If all the AI systems decided to go on strike tomorrow, our civilization would be crippled: We couldn’t get money from our bank, and indeed, our money would disappear; communication, transportation, and manufacturing would all grind to a halt. Fortunately, our intelligent machines are not yet intelligent enough to organize such a conspiracy.

What is new in AI today is the viscerally impressive nature of publicly available examples. For example, consider Google’s self-driving cars (which as of this writing have gone over 200,000 miles in cities and towns), a technology that will lead to significantly fewer crashes, increased capacity of roads, alleviating the requirement of humans to perform the chore of driving, and many other benefits. Driverless cars are actually already legal to operate on public roads in Nevada with some restrictions, although widespread usage by the public throughout the world is not expected until late in this decade. Technology that intelligently watches the road and warns the driver of impending dangers is already being installed in cars. One such technology is based in part on the successful model of visual processing in the brain created by MIT’s Tomaso Poggio. Called MobilEye, it was developed by Amnon Shashua, a former postdoctoral student of Poggio’s. It is capable of alerting the driver to such dangers as an impending collision or a child running in front of the car and has recently been installed in cars by such manufacturers as Volvo and BMW.

I will focus in this section of the book on language technologies for several reasons. Not surprisingly, the hierarchical nature of language closely mirrors the hierarchical nature of our thinking. Spoken language was our first technology, with written language as the second. My own work in artificial intelligence, as this chapter has demonstrated, has been heavily focused on language. Finally, mastering language is a powerfully leveraged capability. Watson has already read hundreds of millions of pages on the Web and mastered the knowledge contained in these documents. Ultimately machines will be able to master all of the knowledge on the Web—which is essentially all of the knowledge of our human-machine civilization.

English mathematician Alan Turing (1912–1954) based his eponymous test on the ability of a computer to converse in natural language using text messages. 13 Turing felt that all of human intelligence was embodied and represented in language, and that no machine could pass a Turing test through simple language tricks. Although the Turing test is a game involving written language, Turing believed that the only way that a computer could pass it would be for it to actually possess the equivalent of human-level intelligence. Critics have proposed that a true test of human-level intelligence should include mastery of visual and auditory information as well. 14 Since many of my own AI projects involve teaching computers to master such sensory information as human speech, letter shapes, and musical sounds, I would be expected to advocate the inclusion of these forms of information in a true test of intelligence. Yet I agree with Turing’s original insight that the text-only version of the Turing test is sufficient. Adding visual or auditory input or output to the test would not actually make it more difficult to pass.

One does not need to be an AI expert to be moved by the performance of Watson on Jeopardy! Although I have a reasonable understanding of the methodology used in a number of its key subsystems, that does not diminish my emotional reaction to watching it— him? —perform. Even a perfect understanding of how all of its component systems work—which no one actually has—would not help you to predict how Watson would actually react to a given situation. It contains hundreds of interacting subsystems, and each of these is considering millions of competing hypotheses at the same time, so predicting the outcome is impossible. Doing a thorough analysis—after the fact—of Watson’s deliberations for a single three-second query would take a human centuries.

To continue my own history, in the late 1980s and 1990s we began working on natural-language understanding in limited domains. You could speak to one of our products, called Kurzweil Voice, about anything you wanted, so long as it had to do with editing documents. (For example, “Move the third paragraph on the previous page to here.”) It worked pretty well in this limited but useful domain. We also created systems with medical domain knowledge so that doctors could dictate patient reports. It had enough knowledge of fields such as radiology and pathology that it could question the doctor if something in the report seemed unclear, and would guide the physician through the reporting process. These medical reporting systems have evolved into a billion-dollar business at Nuance.

Understanding natural language, especially as an extension to automatic speech recognition, has now entered the mainstream. As of the writing of this book, Siri, the automated personal assistant on the iPhone 4S, has created a stir in the mobile computing world. You can pretty much ask Siri to do anything that a self-respecting smartphone should be capable of doing (for example, “Where can I get some Indian food around here?” or “Text my wife that I’m on my way,” or “What do people think of the new Brad Pitt movie?”), and most of the time Siri will comply. Siri will entertain a small amount of nonproductive chatter. If you ask her what the meaning of life is, she will respond with “42,” which fans of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy will recognize as its “answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything.” Knowledge questions (including the one about the meaning of life) are answered by Wolfram Alpha, described on page 170. There is a whole world of “chatbots” who do nothing but engage in small talk. If you would like to talk to our chatbot named Ramona, go to our Web site KurzweilAI.net and click on “Chat with Ramona.”

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